100 , ". _ . ..at it><> , '\ -= · f\ j \ / I JZ r \ , > ' N ' , ---; .: .......... -. "'W-^'. ............ , .) { , I ............"""" " <<. Only Wallace does it this "Wa When Wallace is the artisan, objets d'art become useful. For example, this Town House Coffee Set. Heavy silverplate coffee pot, sugar and creamer. $99.50. Matching waiter. $19.50. At fine stores. Wa Ilace Iwl Si Iversmiths Wallingford Conn. 06492 When a lady has a piazza A patio. A pool. Or just a yen for some lovely, breezy furniture. Crafted to please today and for years. When a lady longs for summer, long before summer, she takes a stroll to Paine Furniture- the store for all seasons. furniture Boston · Natick · Peabody Springfield · Hartford d C ." ene ommunlsm, a young wnter told me. "By that we mean a Com- munist system that provIdes constitu- tional rights, free speech and a free press, a secret ballot and elections in which the voter has a real choice to make, a responsible parliament and a gen uine opposition, <:1 passport for ev- erybody, higher living standards, and, gradua]]y, a chance for us to he come masters of our own destiny." The young man's USe of the word "'gradual- ly" was typical of the realism I have noticed here, even among those who are most enthusiastic ahout the recent developments. The C ze ch oslo va ks know that tln) demand for a change in their foreign policr now would he thoroughl) unrealistic. The R us- sians are not loved (though there has always heen a strong Pan-Slav feeling here), hut they are, as one }'oung Communist frankly admitted, "the lesser evil. " At a large meeting of students, Josef Smrkovský, a melnber of the Presidium and one of the ablest of the reformers, was asked why C7echoslovakia could not reorient her foreign polic}. (It was Slnrkovskf who organized the liheration of Prague in 1945. Later, when he publicI) de- hunked the legend that the Red Army alonL had done the job, he was purged by order of Stalin.) "\Vhen you get home tonight, look at a map," said SmrkovskfT. The students laughed, understanding qUIte wen what Smrkov- skfT was te]]ing them about C7echoslo- vakIa's exposed position he tween \Vest Germany and the Soviet Union. In the late nineteen-thirties, at the time of Konrad Henlein's successful campaign to make Czechoslovakia give up the Sudetenland to the Na7is, it was not ad visahle to speak Germcln on the streets of Prague, and for some months after the end of the war it was downright unsafe. Today, one hears so 111uch German spoken-a lot of it hy prosperous V\T est German busi- nessmen-that Prague seems practical- ly a hilingual city. ( ot all the Ger- mans seen in Prague are businessmen, and not a]] of them, of course, are \Vest Germans. The city is no\\' a favonte meeting place for friends and relatives from the two parts of Gerlnany. Froln either Dresden or N uremherg, it's only a few hours to Prague by train. J have witnessed some moving re- union Scenes in the Main Railway Station here-it was formerly called Wilson Station, after Woodrow V\Til- son-in the mIddle of the afternoon, when the VIndobona Express, which runs between East Berlin and Vienna, pu]]s In You can usually tell the East